Consolidation Reference Manual

The Consolidation reference manual was last updated on 15 July 2011. It does not contain any changes to consolidation legislation that has occurred since that time and will not be updated in future. It cannot be relied on for currency of content. For any future consolidation changes, you will be able to access information from our consolidation home page or by visiting our 'New legislation' page.
You can still refer to the Consolidation reference manual for consolidation information that has not been impacted by changes in the legislation.

C9 Tax liabilities

C9-5 Worked examples:

C9-5-220 Single entity treatment - deductibility of interest

Description

This example shows how, under the single entity rule, the basis of deductibility of interest paid by a holding company for funds on-lent to a subsidiary may differ from the situation applying outside consolidation (although the result may be the same).

Commentary

When a consolidated group is formed, the group is treated as a single entity for income tax purposes → section 701-1 ITAA 1997. Broadly, this means that on joining a consolidated group the subsidiary members lose their individual income tax identities and are treated as parts of the head company of the consolidated group (rather than as separate entities) for the purposes of determining the head company's income tax liability.

In effect, the consolidated group is treated as if it were a single divisional company. Intragroup assets and liabilities and intragroup transactions have no income tax consequences. The head company is the only entity the income tax law recognises for the purposes of working out the group's income tax liability or losses. → 'Single entity treatment', C9-1-110

Where a holding company borrows money to lend to a subsidiary, the basis of deductibility of interest paid by the holding company differs in consolidated and non-consolidated situations, although the result may be the same. In a consolidated group, intragroup transactions have no income tax consequences. The deductibility of interest paid to a non-member is determined by looking at the economic substance for the group as a whole of the purpose of the loan and the use to which it is put - that is, income tax law applies to the interest as if the head company was a single company undertaking the borrowing.

→ Taxation Determination TD 2004/36

Example

Facts

ParentCo and its wholly-owned subsidiary, SubCo, form a consolidatable group (Figure 1). Prior to consolidation, ParentCo borrows money to make a loan to SubCo for the purpose of making SubCo commercially feasible and promoting generation of income by SubCo - and thence ultimately by ParentCo through the receipt of dividends from SubCo.

The group subsequently consolidates.

Figure 1: Funds on-lent by ParentCo to SubCo

Analysis

Prior to consolidation, the interest paid by ParentCo on the monies loaned is deductible to ParentCo under section 8-1 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA 1997) as it is incurred in producing ParentCo's assessable income and carrying on its business.

Following consolidation, the single entity rule means the loan between ParentCo (as head company) and SubCo is ignored for the purposes of working out ParentCo's income tax position. The interest paid by ParentCo on the loan is therefore no longer deductible on the basis that the monies are loaned to its subsidiary for the purposes of making the latter commercially feasible and promoting the ultimate generation of income by ParentCo through dividends to be received from SubCo.

Under the single entity rule, SubCo is treated as a part, or division, of ParentCo. The deductibility of the interest paid by ParentCo is therefore determined according to the normal principles applying to a single company. The use to which SubCo puts the loaned funds is attributed to ParentCo - that is, the relevant transactions are treated according to their economic substance for the group as a whole.

The deductibility of the interest payments is determined under the tests in section 8-1 on this basis. The interest is deductible if the borrowed monies are used in gaining or producing assessable income, or necessarily incurred in carrying on a business for the purpose of gaining or producing assessable income for the group (represented by the head company).

References

Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 , section 8-1

Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 - as amended by New Business Tax System (Consolidation) Act (No. 1) 2002 (No. 68 of 2002), section 701-1

Taxation Determination TD 2004/36 - Income tax: consolidation; can the head company of a consolidated group claim a deduction under section 8-1 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 for the interest paid on funds borrowed before consolidation and on-lent interest-free to a subsidiary member of the consolidated group?

History

Revision history

Section C9-5-220 first published 3 December 2003.

Further revisions are described below.

Date Amendment Reason
26.10.05 Reference to new tax determination.  
  Changes to 'Example,' For clarification.

Proposed changes to consolidation

Proposed changes to consolidation announced by the Government are not incorporated into the Consolidation reference manual until they become law.

In the interim, information about such changes can be viewed at:

http://assistant treasurer.gov.au (Assistant Treasurer's press releases)
www.treasury.gov.au (Treasury papers on refinements to the consolidation regime).

Current at 26 October 2005